The Denver Post

St. Nix toy store closes, may relocate in near future

- By Amber Carlson

On Feb. 19, two months after a man attempted to buy more than $56,000 of merchandis­e on a bad check from Longmont’s St. Nix toy store, the store’s brick-andmortar location at 337 Main St. closed its doors for the last time.

Nicholas Marquiess, St. Nix’s web manager (and partner of the store’s owner, Virginia Miskel), said he and Miskel plan to reopen the store in the near future, but the new location has yet to be determined.

“We are no longer putting any more time and energy into this man and what he has done to us,” the couple’s Gofundme page reads. “We are doing everything we can to move forward.”

In the meantime, the store remains open for online business.

Marquiess and Miskel were initially considerin­g relocating to a smaller space in Berthoud, but as of Feb. 17, Marquiess said the two were hoping to move into a new space in Longmont, about 2 miles north of the original store. Their goal, Marquiess said, is to “start small and build back up.”

St. Nix was forced to close for several weeks in December because a man had come into the store asking to buy “one of everything” for a toy drive for Toys for Tots. Michael Parsons, 69, attempted to buy 70 boxes of merchandis­e with a blank check, telling the owners to fill in the check with the amount due and wait until the following week to deposit it.

Parsons was suspected of check fraud after the incident, which cleared most of the inventory off of St. Nix’s shelves and forced Marquiess and Miskel to close the store during the holiday season, costing them tens of thousands of dollars in revenue.

However, Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty said his office will not press criminal charges against Parsons because St. Nix accepted a post- dated blank check from him.

“Colorado case law … establishe­s that when a person is accepting a check that’s either blank, or they have the knowledge that the account does not have the money in it, it negates the intent to defraud that we have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt,” Dougherty said.

Detective Stephen Desmond of Longmont Public Safety said he had hoped for a different outcome for the victims.

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